4.5 Article

Renal and blood pressure effects of dapagliflozin in recently hospitalized patients with heart failure with mildly reduced or preserved ejection fraction: Insights from the DELIVER trial

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HEART FAILURE
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ejhf.2915

Keywords

Acute heart failure; SGLT2 inhibitor; Renal function; Blood pressure

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In patients recently hospitalized for heart failure, dapagliflozin can reduce the risk of hospitalization and has minimal effects on blood pressure and renal function. It is a safe and effective treatment option for stabilized patients with heart failure.
Aims Patients recently hospitalized for heart failure (HF) often have unstable haemodynamics and experience worsening renal failure, and are at elevated risk for recurrent HF events. In DELIVER, dapagliflozin reduced HF events or cardiovascular death including among patients who were hospitalized or recently hospitalized.Methods and results We examined the effects of dapagliflozin versus placebo on estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) slope (acute and chronic), 1-month change in systolic blood pressure, and the occurrence of serious hypovolaemic or renal adverse events in patients with and without HF hospitalization within 30 days of randomization. The 654 (90 randomized during hospitalization, 147 1-7 days post-discharge and 417 8-30 days post-discharge) recently hospitalized patients had lower baseline eGFR compared with those without recent HF hospitalization (median [interquartile range] 55 [43, 71] vs. 60 [47, 75] ml/min/1.73 m(2)). Dapagliflozin consistently reduced the risk of all-cause (p(interaction) = 0.20), cardiac-related (p(interaction) = 0.75), and HF-specific (p(interaction) = 0.90) hospitalizations, irrespective of recent HF hospitalization. In those recently hospitalized, acute placebo-corrected eGFR reductions with dapagliflozin were modest and similar to patients without recent hospitalization (-2.0 [-4.1, +0.1] vs. -3.4 [-3.9, -2.9] ml/min/1.73 m(2), p(interaction) = 0.12). Dapagliflozin's effect to slow chronic eGFR decline was similar regardless of recent hospitalization (p(interaction) = 0.57). Dapagliflozin had a minimal effect on 1-month systolic blood pressure and to a similar degree in patients with and without recent hospitalization (-1.3 vs.-1.8 mmHg, p(interaction) = 0.64). There was no treatment-related excess in renal or hypovolaemic serious adverse events, irrespective of recent HF hospitalization.Conclusion In patients recently hospitalized with HF, initiation of dapagliflozin had minimal effects on blood pressure and did not increase renal or hypovolaemic serious adverse events, yet afforded long-term cardiovascular and kidney protective effects. These data suggest that the benefit to risk ratio favours initiation of dapagliflozin among stabilized patients hospitalized or recently hospitalized for HF hospitalization.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available